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On Tuesday, the EU will begin retaliating for U.S. tariffs

The European Union's members decided on Wednesday to launch their first countermeasures in response to the tariffs imposed by U.S. president Donald Trump. They will join China and Canada, who have already retaliated and escalated a global conflict.

The approval was given on the same day as Trump's "reciprocal tariffs" on the EU, and dozens of other countries, including massive 104% tariffs on China. This extended his tariff assault and encouraged more widespread sales across the financial markets.

Trump's plan to target countries that he claims impose high barriers against U.S. imports includes tariffs of 25% on steel, aluminium and automobiles as well as a new tariff of 20% for nearly all other goods.

In response to the U.S. tariffs on metals, the European Union will impose duties of up to 25% on an array of U.S. imported products starting next Tuesday. The bloc has not yet decided how it will respond to the levies on cars and other goods.

According to a document seen, the U.S. imports are maize, wheat barley rice, motorbikes, poultry, fruits, wood, clothing, and dental floss. The total was about 23 billion euros (21 billion euros) last year. This means that the EU will retaliate against goods of less value than the 26 billion euro EU metals exported to the U.S.

The regulations will be implemented in phases - April 15, May 16, and the final phase on almonds and soybeans on December 1.

The European Commission stated that "these countermeasures could be suspended at any moment, if the US agreed to a fair, balanced and negotiated result."

On Wednesday afternoon, a committee of 27 trade experts from across the EU voted on the proposal. EU diplomats reported that 26 EU countries voted for the proposal, while only Hungary voted against.

The vote result was expected, as the Commission had already canvassed EU member states and refined a preliminary list since mid-March. This initial list removed U.S. dairy products and alcoholic beverages.

France and Italy, two major wine exporters, expressed their concern when Trump threatened to slap a tariff of 200% on EU wine and spirits if the EU imposed its 50% duty on Bourbon.

Trump has already responded, almost doubling the duties on Chinese imports. China responded by imposing 84% tariffs starting Thursday on U.S. products.

(source: Reuters)